Galbraith Family


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Galbraith Family

GALBRAITH. (I) The family of Galbraith is of the remotest antiquity–the
name being derived from the Celtic. It was in the parish of Baldunoch, County
Stirling, that the Galbraiths of Baldunoch, chiefs of the name, had their
residence. In Frazer’s statistical accounts of the inhabitants of the Isle of
Gigha, the following occurs: “The majority of them are of the names of
Galbraith and McNeill, the former reckoned the more ancient.” The
Galbraiths in the Gaelic language are called Breatanieh, that is Britons, or
the children of the Briton, and theirs was once reckoned a great name in
Scotland according to the following lines translated from the Gaelic:

Galbraiths from the Red Tower

Noblest of Scottish surnames.

The first of the name of whom we have any mention is John Galbraith, who
was the father of the following (he probably died before the emigration of his
sons from Ireland to America): James, born 1666, married Rebecca Chambers;
John married and left issue, but further than this fact we have no knowledge;
after his arrival in America he remained several years in Philadelphia, and
some of his children settled west of the Susquehanna in what is now York and
Adams counties, and their descendants emigrated to Kentucky.

(II) James Galbraith, son of John Galbraith, of Scotch parentage, was born
1666, in North of Ireland, whence he emigrated about the year 1718, settling
in Conestoga, afterward Donegal township, then Chester county, Province of
Pennsylvania. He was one of the founders of the old Derry Church, a man of
prominence, and head of a remarkable family. He died Aug. 23, 1744, and is
buried in the old graveyard at Derry. His wife was Rebecca Chambers, daughter
of Arthur Chambers. Of his children we have the following: John, born 1690,
married Janet __________; Andrew, born 1692, married and left issue; James,
born 1703, married Elizabeth Bertram; Eleanor, married Feb. 27, 1735, Patrick
McKinley and had issue (surname McKinley),John, Joseph and Janet; Isabel,
married Oct. 21, 1735, Alexander McMillan; Rebecca, died in 1748, married
_____ Stewart, and had issue (surname Stewart), Charles, Robert, William,
Frances and Margaret.

(III) John Galbraith (James, John), born 1690 in the North of Ireland, died
October 1753, in Donegal township, Lancaster Co., Pa.; settled along Donegal
Meeting-House run, about one and three-fourth miles below his brother Andrew
in 1718; was a miller by trade and built a grist and sawmill in 1721, at the
run along the “great road,” which very likely branched from the
Paxtang and Conestoga road some miles east of Mt. Joy, and extended through
the Scotch-Irish settlement to the Conoy Indiana town; he also kept an
“ordinary”; was elected sheriff of the county of Lancaster in 1731,
and was a member of the first jury drawn in that county. He married Janet
__________ born about 1693, and they had issue: Robert, born 1715, married
Rebecca _________. Elizabeth; Margaret.

(III) Andrew Galbraith (James, John), born about 1692, in the North of
Ireland; came to America with his father and settled along the run which has
its source at Donegal Meeting-House, now Lancaster Co., Pa. He was appointed
the first coroner, afterward, in 1730, one of the justices of the court of
Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions, a position he held six years. In 1732 he
and his neighbor, George Stewart (another account says John Wright, a Quaker),
were candidates for the General Assembly. At that time none but, freeholders
were allowed to vote, and the only polling place was the town of Lancaster,
where all voters were obliged to go. Mr. Galbraith took no active part in the
canvass himself, but his wife mounted her favorite mare, Nelly, road out
through the Scotch-Irish settlement, and persuaded them to go with her to the
county town. She appeared at the courthouse leading a procession of mounted
men, whom she halted and addressed. The effect was that her husband was
triumphantly elected. After his first election he seems to have had no
opposition. He took out a patent for 212 1/2 acres May 2, 1737, and was one of
the first ruling elders of the Donegal Church; appointed a justice of the
peace in 1730, a position he held until 1747, when he removed west of the
Susquehanna; he served several years in the Provincial Assembly, and was one
of the most prominent of the pioneer settlers and a fair and trustworthy
officer. After the year 1746, when he disposed of his farm, very little is of
record concerning him. Of his children we have only the following: John, born
in 1717, married Jennett McCullough; Arthur, on the 22d of September, 1766,
took up 250 acres of land on Shaver’s creek; Robert, who died prior to 1768,
married and left Ann, aged sixteen years.

(III) James Galbraith (James, John) born in 1703 in the North of Ireland,
died June 11, 1786, in East Pennsboro township, Cumberland Co., Pa., and
buried in the Derry Church graveyard; he took up a tract in now Derry
township, Dauphin county, on Spring creek, not far from the church glebe, the
warrant therefor being granted the 13th of March, 1737; he became a man of
note on the frontiers, and the early provincial records of Pennsylvania
contain frequent reference to him; was elected sheriff of the county in
October, 1742; for many years was one of the justices for the county of
Lancaster, and served as an officer during the Indian wars of 1755-1763.
Toward the Revolutionary period he removed to Cumberland county. He married
April 6, 1734, in Christ Church (at that time the English government
recognized only marriages performed in the Church of England), Philadelphia,
Elizabeth Bertram, born 1714 or 1718, according to one account, in the North
of Ireland, and according to another at Newcastle upon Tyne, in England, died
Feb. 2, 1799, in Derry (or East Pennsboro) township, Dauphin Co., Pa., the
daughter of Rev. William Bertram; she was a woman of rare accomplishments and
excellence. They had issue: William, born 1736 (nothing further is known of
him); Bertram, born Sept. 24, 1738, married first Ann Scott, secondly
Henrietta Huling; Robert, born 1740, died January, 1804, in Huntingdon county,
Pa., was an officer in the Revolution, commanding a regiment and was
commissioned president judge of the county, Nov. 23, 1787; Dorcas, born 1742,
married John Buchanan; Elizabeth, born 1744, married Clarence Torrance;
Thomas, born 1746; John born 1748, married and had issue; Andrew, born 1750,
married Barbara Kyle.

(IV) Robert Galbraith (John, James, John), born about 1715, in the North of
Ireland, died March 8, 1748, in Donegal township, Lancaster Co., Pa. He and
his wife, Rebecca, had issue: John, born 1739, married Mary McCormick;
Rebecca, born 1742, married Ephraim Blaine.

Mrs. Rebecca Galbraith subsequently married Capt. John Byers, of Donegal,
who afterward removed to Cumberland county, Pa.; he was an officer in the
French and Indian war and a man of prominence in the Provincial days.

(IV) John Galbraith (Andrew, James, John), born about 1717, in Donegal
township, Lancaster Co., Pa., and was buried in Silver Spring churchyard;
married April 23, 1742, Jennett McCullough. They had issue James, born 1743,
married Martha McClellan; Jennett, born 1745; Sarah, born 1747; Robert, born
1748, married Mary _________.

(IV) Bertram Galbraith (James, James, John), born Sept. 24, 1738, in Derry
township, Lancaster (now Dauphin)Co., Pa., died March 9, 1804, in Cumberland
county, Pa., while on a visit to his brother Andrew. He received the best
education the schools of that day afforded, and studied surveying, a
profession he followed many years. During the French and Indian wars Colonel
Galbraith served as an officer in a company of rangers for the protection of
the frontiers. From 1760 to 1775, acting in his professional capacity, he
surveyed the greater portion of the land located in the present counties of
Dauphin, Perry and Juniata. He was a member of the Provincial convention of
Jan. 23, 1775; delegate to the Provincial conference of June 18, 1776; member
of the constitutional convention of July 15, 1776. During that year serving
also as a member of the Assembly, 1776-1777. On June 3, 1777, he was appointed
county lieutenant; Nov. 8, one of the assistants to collect clothing for the
army; Dec. 16, appointed by the Assembly to take subscriptions for the
continental loan. He acted as one of the commission which met at New Haven,
Conn., Nov. 22, 1777, to regulate the prices of commodities in the States.
After four years of executive and exhaustive labor Colonel Galbraith was
compelled to resign the office of county lieutenant, but remained in the
service as an officer of militia until the restoration of peace. In 1789 he
was appointed one of the commissioners to view the Juniata and Susquehanna,
and mark the places where locks or canals were necessary to render these
streams navigable. He was appointed deputy surveyor Nov. 4, 1791, and while
acting as such took up large tracts in Lykens valley, but dying before patents
were issued to him his heirs lost them all in the litigations which ensued.
Colonel Galbraith was twice married; first March 30, 1759, to Ann Scott, born
Dec. 26,1741, died June 29, 1793, daughter of Josiah Scott, of Donegal. They
had: (1)Josiah married and had two sons, one of whom, Bertram, married his
cousin Mary, and settled in Milton, Pa., and they also had two sons: Josiah’s
family, except Bertram’s son William, went to the West at an early date, and
there is no record of any save that the younger son was engaged in the Indian
war in Minnesota in 1862. (2) Samuel Scott studied medicine; assisted in
laying out the town of Bainbridge; was twice married, first wife Margaret,
born in 1772, died April 29, 1801, and second wife, Juliette born 1774, died
April 1, 1813; he had two sons, Dr. Bertram and James, the former marrying
first a Miss Reigart, of Lancaster, and secondly a Miss Lehman of the same
place, who, after the Doctor’s death became the wife of Col. James Cameron.
(3) Elizabeth died near Washington village, Lancaster Co., Pa. (4) Mary, d.s.p.
(5) Henrietta died April, 1804, married David Cook, and had issue (surname
Cook): Bertram, d.s.p. and Mary Ann, who married Henry Carpenter and left
issue (surname Carpenter): James Cook, Dr. Henry, Maria Louisa and Isaac A.
(6) Jean, born 1772, died Jan. 13, 1842, married David Elder (see Elder
record). (7) Ann married Thomas Bayley, born Jan. 6, 1732, died Feb. 9, 1807,
son of John Bayley, of Donegal; no issue. (8) James married April 6, 1810,
Rosetta Work, daughter of Joseph Work, of Donegal; they lived on the island in
the Susquehanna opposite the village of Bainbridge; they had issue: Sarah Work
died unmarried; Julia died unmarried; Mary married her cousin Bertram
Galbraith, of Milton, Pa.; Annetta married a physician and left no issue; Work
went to Ohio when a lad and died there at the age of twenty-one; William
Bertram, born Oct. 19, 1779, died Nov. 24, 1835, married Sarah Hays, born Dec.
11, 1774, died July 11, 1839, daughter of John and Eleanor Hays.

Colonel Galbraith married secondly Feb. 15, 1798, Henrietta Huling, of Isle
Benvenue; they had issue: Sarah married Samuel Morris, of Philadelphia, and
they had issue (surname Morris): Henrietta, Elizabeth, Sarah, Samuel and
Richard; Bertram Gillespie, born May 9, 1804, married Eliza Fager Bell.

After Colonel Galbraith’s death his widow married George Green, of Easton,
Pa., and they had issue (surname Green): Charles, who died unmarried; George,
of Princeton, N.J.; and Henrietta, of Easton, Pennsylvania.

(IV) John Galbraith (James, James, John),born about 1748; served in the war
of the Revolution; was taken prisoner at the battle of Long Island, and
suffered great hardships while in captivity. After the close of the war he
resided some time in Huntingdon county, Pa., whence he removed to Butler
county, Pa., about 1798, and where he remained until his death. Of his
children we have the following: Alexander married and left issue in Butler
county, Pa,:James became a physician of prominence; John, born 1794, married
Amy Ayres.

(IV) Andrew Galbraith (James, James, John), born about 1750 in Derry
township,Lancaster county, died March 1806, in East Pennsboro township,
Cumberland Co., Pa.; married Barbara Kyle, born in Donegal township, Lancaster
Co., Pa., daughter of John Kyle. They had issue: Jean, born 1781, married
Matthew Miller, and had (surname Miller): Andrew Galbraith; Elizabeth, born
1784; Juliana, born 1786, married William McNeill Irvine; Mary (Molly), born
1789, married Feb. 13, 1810, Michael Ege; Sarah (Sally) W., born Jan. 25,
1791, married John Bannister Gibson; Barbara, born 1793; Dorcas, born 1795;
Nancy (Agnes), born 1797.

(V) John Galbraith (Robert, John, James, John), born about 1739, in Donegal
township, Lancaster Co., Pa., died prior to 1803 in East Pennsboro township,
Cumberland county; served in the Revolutionary war; was taken prisoner at the
battle of Long Island; married Mary McCormick and they had issue: Thomas James
McCormick; John married and left issue: Elizabeth, married Patrick Hays;
Dorcas; Robert married and left issue: Agnes; Mary; William Bertram.

(V) Rebecca Galbraith (Robert, John, James, John), born in 1742 in Donegal
township, Lancaster Co., Pa.; died about 1780, in Middleton township,
Cumberland county; married June 26, 1765, Ephraim Blaine, born May 26, 1741,
in the North of Ireland; died Feb. 16,1804, in Middleton township, Cumberland
Co., Pa., son of James and Elizabeth Blaine. The elder Blaine, born of Scotch
ancestry came with his family from the North of Ireland, in the vicinity of
Londonderry, to America prior to 1745, and settled in Toboyne township,
Cumberland county. He took up a large tract of land on the south side of the
Juniata river, as did each of his children a few years later. He became an
influential man on the then frontiers of the Province, and was quite prominent
in affairs during the French and Indian wars, as well as toward the close of
his life in the struggle for independence. He died at his residence in Toboyne
township in July 1792, well advanced in years, leaving a wife, Elizabeth, and
nine children. The eldest of these was Ephraim, who received a classical
education at the school of Rev. Dr. Alison, in Chester county, Pa., and was
recommended by him for an ensigncy in the Provincial service as being “a
gentleman of good family.” He was appointed commissary sergeant, and
during the Bouquet expedition to the westward, in 1763, was connected with the
2d Provincial Regiment. From 1771 to 1773 he served as sheriff of Cumberland
county. At the outbreak of the Revolutionary struggle he entered early into
the contest and assisted in raising a battalion of Associators, of which he
was commissioned lieutenant colonel, holding the position until he was
appointed by the Supreme Executive Council as county lieutenant of Cumberland,
April 5, 1777. This office he resigned in August following, when he entered
the commissary department of the Continental establishment. He was
commissioned commissary general of purchases Feb. 19, 1778, a position he held
over three years, including one of the most trying periods of the war-the
cantonment at Valley Forge. He was a man of large fortune and recourse, so
that, during the long and severe winter, with the aid of personal friends, he
made an advance of $6,000,000, for use of the patriot army. Millions of
dollars passed through his hands without suspicion of his personal sacrifices,
however, Colonel Blaine’s estate became impaired, although his fortune
remained ample. While in the service he enjoyed the confidence of Washington
and his fellow officers. It was at his home that the first president remained
during his week’s stay at Carlisle during the so-called Whiskey Insurrection
of 1794. Subsequently Colonel Blaine retired to his farm in Middleton
township, Cumberland Co., Pa., where he closed his eminently patriotic and
honorable career in his sixty-third year. He was twice married-his second wife
being Sarah E. Duncan, widow of John Duncan, of Carlisle, and daughter of Col.
Samuel Postlethwaite, and they had one son, Ephraim, d.s.p. By his first wife,
Rebecca Galbraith, there was issue, six children, of whom we have only the
following (surname Blaine): James (grandfather of James G. Blaine), died 1832,
married first Jean ________, and secondly Margaret Lyon; Robert, died January,
1826, married Anna Susanna Metzgar, and they had issue (surname Blaine),
Rebecca, married Rev. Jeremiah Chamberlain, D.D., and Anna Susanna, married
Samuel Alexander; Ephraim Metzgar; Eleanor, born 1789, died Jan. 9, 1839,
married first Dr. Levi Wheaton, born Sept. 6, 1796, died Sept. 24, 1824, and
had issue (surname Wheaton), Ellen Blaine, d.s.p., Mary Blaine, d.s.p., and
she married secondly John Hays, born 1794, died April 29, 1854, and had issue
(surname Hays), Robert, d.s.p., John, married Jenny Smead, and Mary Blaine,
married Richard Mulligan; Mary; James, d.s.p.; David, who died in December,
1804, married Isabella Hill, and had issue, among others (surname Blaine): (1)
Robert, who married and had John, David and William, and (2) Ephraim.

(V) James Galbraith (John, Andrew, James, John), born about 1741, died
prior to 1790; was a soldier of the Pennsylvania Line in the Revolution; in
1783 resided in “Washington borough, near Carlisle”; married Martha
McClellan, daughter of John McClellan, of Danville, and they had issue: (1)
John. (2) Rebecca, married July 18, 1793, David Herron.

John McClellan had sons: William George died a prisoner of war in New York;
Col. James died at Mercerburg; Dr. John died at Greencastle. His daughters
were: Martha, who married James Galbraith, and others who married respectively
John Holliday, William Holliday, Capt. John Blair (of Blair county) and Samuel
Culbertson, Mr. McDowell and Mr. Ramsey of Franklin county, Pennyslvania.

(V) Robert Galbraith (John, Andrew, James, John), born about 1748, in
Cumberland county, Pa., died in 1795, in Allen township, Cumberland county. He
and his wife Mary had issue: Nancy (Agnes) married James Pollack; Elizabeth
married Benjamin Hunt; Mary married William Wray; James, Jane married Joseph
Williams; Robert, born 1782; John, born 1784.

(V) Bertram Gillespie Galbraith (Bertram, James, James, John), born May 9,
1804, at Bainbridge, Lancaster Co., Pa., died April 30, 1848, at Bainbridge;
married Feb. 23, 1832, Eliza Fager Bell, youngest daughter of John Bell and
Elizabeth Clouser, of Middle Paxtang township, Dauphin Co., Pa. John Bell was
the only child of William Bell, and his wife, Catherine Park, of Scotch-Irish
birth, who came to America on the same vessel which conveyed John and Charles
Wesley, the founders of Methodism. Mrs. Galbraith for a period of twenty years
was postmistress at Bainbridge, resigning only by reason of her advanced
years; being left a widow with a large family she felt the necessity of
bringing into action all her energies and business qualifications to the
better support of her children. All her six sons were in the Civil war, and
did faithful service. Mr. and Mrs. Galbraith had issue: William Bell, born
Oct. 15, 1833, in Harrisburg, Pa., married Elizabeth Lane (resides in Havana,
Ill); James Carpenter, born July 9, 1835, in Harrisburg, died July 18, 1872,
unmarried, in Bainbridge, Pa.; John Fager, born July 23, 1837, in Bainbridge,
Pa., married Henrietta Hoff, of Bainbridge, and had Eliza, Laura, William,
Catherine, John (d.s.p.), Henry, Robert, and John (2); Jefferson Green, born
July 28, 1839, in Marietta, Pa., married Mary Filbert, of Bainbridge, Pa., and
had Emily, Charles, Mary (d.s.p.), Wildey (d.s.p.) and Annie Filbert (resides
in Philadelphia); Franklin Grush, born March 7, 1842, in Marietta, Pa.,
married Annie N. Meyer, of Harrisburg, Pa., (deceased), and had Nettie
Elizabeth and Annie Meyer (d.s.p.) (resides in Bainbridge, Pa.); Bertram
Gillespie, born Sept. 7, 1845, in Bainbridge, Pa., married Miriam Reese, of
Mt. Joy, Pa., and had Miriam, Hellen, and Aurelia (resides in Wrightsville,
Pa.).

(V) John Galbraith (John, James, James, John), born 1794, in Huntingdon
county, Pa., died June 15, 1860, in Erie, Pa. His father removed to Butler
county, Pa., toward the close of the century, and he was brought up on the
farm. When a young man he commenced teaching school, and later on began the
study of law in the office of John William Ayres, of Butler, and was admitted
to the bar at the age of twenty-three. He shortly after removed to Franklin,
Venango Co., Pa., where he rose rapidly, both in his profession and in popular
esteem. His first official position was as a member of the Assembly, to which
he was elected three times. He was elected to Congress as a Democrat in 1832,
1834 and 1838. In 1837 he removed to Erie, where he resided until his death.
On retiring from Congress as a Democrat in 1840, he practiced law until the
fall of 1851, when he was elected president judge for Erie, Crawford and
Warren counties. His death occurred before the expiration of his term of
office. Judge Galbraith was one of the foremost men in promoting the various
public enterprises that gave the first strong impulse to Erie county. He was
the pioneer in projecting the railroad from Erie to the Ohio State line, and
aided greatly in reviving the long dormant proposed railroad from Erie to
Sunbury, now the Philadelphia & Erie railroad. One of his favorite ideas,
the establishment of a prison for youthful offenders exclusively, has been
adopted by the State in the institution at Huntingdon, and elsewhere. Judge
Galbraith married in May, 1822, Amy Ayres, daughter of Rev. Robert Ayres, an
Episcopalian minister, a resident of Brownsville, Fayette Co., Pa., and
brother of Gen. William Ayres. Mrs. Galbraith died March 2, 1868, in the city
of Philadelphia. They had issue: (1) William Ayres, born May 9, 1823, married
Fanny Davenport. (2) Elizabeth Ann married William S. Lane, of Erie, now a
practicing lawyer of Philadelphia.

(V) Julianna Galbraith (Andrew, James, James, John), born about 1786, in
Cumberland county, Pa., died Jan. 13, 1862, in Philadelphia, at the residence
of her son, William Callender Irvine, and is buried in the Laurel Hill
cemetery. She married July 26, 1808, William McNeill Irvine, born about 1778
in Carlisle, Pa., and there buried. He was the second son of Gen. William
Irvine, of the Revolution, and Anne Callender, daughter of Capt. Robert
Callender, of Middlesex, Cumberland Co., Pa. He was educated at Dickinson
College, where he graduated; subsequently studied law with Judge Thomas
Duncan, and was elected to the Cumberland county bar in 1802. He afterward
located at Harrisburg, and was admitted to the Dauphin county bar at an
adjourned court in March, 1807. He entered the United States army as captain
May 3, 1808, in the regiment of light artillery, and was stationed several
years at New Orleans. He left the army, by resignation, about 1811 or 1812,
and resumed the practice of law at Sunbury. In July, 1813, he was acting
adjutant general of Pennsylvania, which duties he performed until his
appointment by the president of the United States as colonel of the 42d
Regiment, United States Infantry, Aug. 4, 1813. At the close of the war he
resigned and located at Harrisburg, and was appointed deputy attorney general
for the counties of Dauphin and Northumberland; subsequently commissioned by
Governor Snyder, Sept. 14, 1815, escheator general of the State, which
position he held until the abolishment of that office. >From 1819 to 1821
he was adjutant general of Pennsylvania, and had previously, 1818-19,
represented the county of Dauphin in the State Legislature, and to him is due
the credit for originating, authorizing and directing the erection of the
capitol building at Harrisburg. From about the year 1826 to 1850 he resided at
Gettysburg. In 1847 Governor Shunk appointed him law judge for the York and
Adams district, on the expiration of Judge Durkee’s term, but he resigned
shortly after, owing to some difficulties with the members of the bar and
their efforts made to impeach him. Colonel Irvine was a brilliant pleader but
not a lawyer, hence his failure in the judicial station to which he had been
elevated. He returned to Harrisburg, where he resumed the practice of the law
for a while, and subsequently died there. He was an excellent military
officer, and a gentleman of fine appearance, tall and commanding, of good
conversational powers and a delightful companion, and for a period of thirty
years was quite prominent and influential in public affairs. They left issue
(surname Irvine): Andrew Galbraith, a physician of prominence in Warren
county, Pa., and died a few years since; William Callender, formerly in the
quartermaster’s department Unites States army, and now residing in
Philadelphia.

(V) Sarah W. Galbraith (Andrew, James, James, Robert), born Jan. 25, 1791,
died May 2, 1853, in Carlisle, Pa.; married in 1810 John Bannister Gibson,
born Nov. 8, 1780, in Shearmans Valley, now Perry township, Pa., died May 2,
1853, in the city of Philadelphia, and is buried in Carlisle, Pa. He was of
Scotch-Irish descent, son of Col. George Gibson, who fell in the defeat of St.
Clair on the 14th of November 1791. He entered Dickinson College, graduated
therefrom, and entered the law office of his kinsman Thomas Duncan. He was
admitted to the Cumberland county bar at the March term, 1803. In 1810 he was
elected to the Pennsylvania Legislature, and in 1812 appointed president judge
for the Eleventh Judicial district, composed of the counties of Tioga,
Bradford, Susquehanna and Luzerne. Upon the death of Judge Brackenridge, in
1816, Governor Snyder appointed Judge Gibson associate judge of Supreme court,
of Pennsylvania. Under the act of Assembly of April 8, 1826, the number of
Supreme court judges increased from three to five. The year following Chief
Justice Tilghman died, and Judge Gibson succeeded him. In 1838, on the day of
the adoption of the then new constitution of the State, he resigned his office
but was immediately reappointed by Governor Ritner. In 1851, when the
judiciary became elective, his seat became vacant. He, however, was reelected
as associate judge and dispensed the high conventions of that office until his
death. No greater encomium can be passed upon him than is inscribed upon the
marble shaft which marked the place of his repose—from the pen of the late
eminent jurist, Jeremiah S. Black. Mr. and Mrs. Gibson had issue (surname
Gibson): Margaretta married Col. Charles McClure, and left issue; Sarah
married Richard Anderson, U.S. army, and had issue; Annie married Milnor
Roberts, civil engineer, and left issue; John Bannister died unmarried;
George, U.S.A., married Fannie Hunt.

(VI) Robert Galbraith (John,Robert, John, James, Robert), died March, 1787.
They had issue: Samuel, married Feb. 27, 1789, Mary Decker; James; John;
William; Elizabeth; Mary.

(VI) William Ayres Galbraith (John, John, James, James, Robert), born May
9, 1823, in Franklin county, Pa. He was educated at Allegheny College,
Meadville, and at the academy in Erie, Pa., upon his father’s removal to that
town in 1837; studied law with his father, being admitted to the bar May 9,
1844, on his twenty-first birthday. IN September of the same year he entered
Dane Law School, Harvard University, of which Judge Joseph Story and Prof.
Simon Greenleaf were instructors, and there graduated in 1845. Returning to
Erie he began the practice of law. In 1846 he was appointed by Judge Kane,
then attorney general of the State, deputy attorney general for Erie county,
in which office he continued until 1850. Taking an active part in politics he
was a delegate to the Democratic State convention in 1846, and to several
succeeding ones. He was a delegate to the National convention at Charleston in
1860, and at Chicago in 1864. In 1876 he was elected president judge of Erie
county as the people’s candidate, although the Republican party ticket had
about 2,600 majority. His term of office expired in 1887. Judge Galbraith
married May 25, 1846, Fanny Davenport, daughter of Capt. William Davenport, of
Erie, Pa. They had issue.

[All the foregoing is from “Pennsylvania Genealogies,” W.H. Egle.]

(VI) Robert Galbraith, son of Robert and Mary Galbraith, was born in 1782
in the Cumberland valley, and was a pioneer settler in Butler county, Pa.,
where he died in 1826. He married Mary White, and they had children as
follows: (1) Samuel. (2) William married and left these children: Mary, who
married Thomas Watson; Annie, who married William McClung; Robert, who died on
the old homestead in Butler county (he married Isabel, and left
children-Caroline, wife of Dr. J.C. McKee; Mary, who married R.B. Ivory,
attorney of Pittsburgh, Pa; Bell, Henry, and Hon. James M., judge in Butler
county. (3) Mary married John Ralston, and their son James married Maria
Thornburg; they are parents of R.L. Ralston, a leading attorney at Kittanning.
(4) Robert. (5) Joseph. (6) Elizabeth, born in 1803, married William McCain.

In the history of Butler county, Pa., by Waterman, Watkins & Co.
(1883), page 276, we find: “Robert Galbraith was one of the earliest
settlers in the southeast corner of Winfield township. He was a justice of the
peace in early times. It was stated that Robert Galbraith, above, pioneer of
Butler county, arrived in this township in the dead of winter, and putting up
a rude shelter of poles and bark the family lived in it until a log house was
built. He married Mary White, a daughter of Matthew White, after whom
Whitestown in Butler county was named. Of the sons of Robert and Mary (White)
Galbraith, Samuel, William, Robert, and Joseph, all dead” (in 1883).
“The daughters of Robert Galbraith and wife were Mary, Margaret, Rebecca,
Jane, and Elizabeth McCain. William and Joseph lived on the old homestead
after their father. Mrs. Joseph Galbraith and three of her nine sons
still” (1883) “reside in Winfield township, Joseph died in 1878,
aged seventy years.”

Source: pages 659-665, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past and
Present, J.H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed September 1998 by P. Godesky for the Armstrong County Beers
Project
Contributed for use by the Armstrong County Genealogy Project (http://www.pa-roots.com/armstrong/)

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